> I know I will rest easier during this holiday season knowing that department policy at the Department of Justice remains pure and virginal while all around it is seething with corruption and numbed by surrender.
> Oh, just shut up and go away, will you? Tell me no more lies about the rule of law and about how no man is above it. Shove your reports. Any reports. What are they going to tell us that we don’t already know? What are they going to do except emphasize how helpless you were, and highlight the dereliction of duty on the part of your narcoleptic boss?
> The one thing that Trump voters and nonvoters alike have in common is that participatory democracy is just too...damn...hard. Here we are now, entertain us.
> Spouses and individuals living in the same house share up to 13.9% of the microbial strains in their guts, but even people who don’t share a roof but habitually spend free time together share 10%, the researchers found. By contrast, people who live in the same village but who don’t tend to spend time together share only 4%. There is also evidence of transmission chains — friends of friends share more strains than would be expected by chance.
The Puzzle Solver: A Scientist's Desperate Quest to Cure the Illness that Stole His Son is a book by Tracie White with scientist Ronald W. Davis about Davis's efforts to cure his son Whitney Dafoe, who has very severe myalgic encephalomyelitis, also called chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). The book was published on January 5, 2021.
== Publication history ==
The Puzzle Solver began as a work of journalism that Tracie White wrote for Stanford Medicine. She expanded the work into a book (her first) in collaboration with Ronald W. Davis, a renowned scientist and one of the book's subjects. It was...
@CowperKettle I had some time to listen to this and take a quick look at his manifesto. The main thing he's forgotten to talk about is how the superintelligent AI actually becomes a creature in the world, that does mining, manufacturing, that sort of thing. Because as he's described it, the superintelligent AI is basically in the matrix. It doesn't have any arms or legs.
in other words, how does lab AI become killer robots. It's an enormous jump.
@Cerberus Technically, the liaison is mandatory so I try to force myself to pronounce the T but I generally fail and, like most of the people I know, say cen euros. A few of them say cen Z-euros, more frequently kids. That's funny because absolutely everybody make the liaison in cent ans or cent heures.
@Cerberus the umbrella certainly did not work in the way expected. And yes that's still pretty high. The landing was on dirt so I wasn't exactly hurt but I don't plan on doing it again.